"Who am I gonna lean on when times get rough? Who's gon' talk to me till the Sun comes up?..." - Mariah Carey, We Belong Together. đľđ
.
.
#webelongtogether #mariahcarey #rnb #singer #music
Sade Olutola
art blog(derogatory)

Discoholic đŞŠ
macklin celebrini has autism

Andulka

Origami Around
No title available
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Sweet Seals For You, Always

PR's Tumblrdome

romaâ
ojovivo

tannertan36
One Nice Bug Per Day
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

@theartofmadeline
d e v o n

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Tunisia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Vietnam
seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Norway
seen from Malaysia
@earnestcarter
"Who am I gonna lean on when times get rough? Who's gon' talk to me till the Sun comes up?..." - Mariah Carey, We Belong Together. đľđ
.
.
#webelongtogether #mariahcarey #rnb #singer #music
This year taught me: Nothing beats a Jet 2 holiday, btches aint sht and they aint saying nothing, Never cheat at a coldplay concert, 100 men canât do SHT with a gorilla, J-Money be servn everybody, Katy Perry ainât seen a lick of space. 67. Never try to leave a church Marvin Sapp greedy SSA preaching at, Alexis Russo stole Kenneka Jenkins organs, 67, Diddy freaky asl, Derrick groves ran but couldnât hide, Rihanna still ainât putting out no music, I STILL woulda ran through them Chicago kids, B.Simone finances. 67. Willow smith mama ate all the pssy, young thug - Mariah - and Glorilla messy asf, Ariana Grande and Lil Bill creepy as hell, Jt ainât bigger than nobody program, I still donât know 5 Bia songs, Summer walker make good music but she a pick me, and these btches just be giving it out. 67
I currently identify as a conspiracy theorist and my pronouns are:
I/told/you/so
Before yâall start.. Yes, Mary knew. Next song.
NYC Tree Lightings 2025 đ
November 25
-Downtown Brooklyn Gets Lit 6pm (Albee Sq)
November 29
-Park Slope 5:15p (5th Ave & 4th St)
December 2
-Bryant Park 5:30pm (ice skating show, performances)
-The Seaport 6pm (performances, drinks & more)
-Tavern on the Green
December 3
-Rockefeller Center 6pm (*note this is hard for public to get into, must arrive super early)
December 4
-NY Stock Exchange 6pm (festivities 3:30-6:30)
-DUMBO
-Central Park
December 5
-Roosevelt Island
-Fort Greene Park
-Hope Holiday Winter Village 7pm (142-82 Rockaway Blvd Queens)
December 6
-Bronx Little Italy 4-6p (Santa, hot cocoa, cookies, toy giveaway)
December 7
-Park Avenue
December 9
-Madison Square Park
December 11
-Washington Square Park 6pm
See nycforfree.co/holidays & caption for details!
#nyc #christmas #rockefellercenter #holidaytree
Suspect #1 : âWhat happened to She By ShereĂŠ?â
Suspect #2: âJoggers!â
Suspect #1: âExcuse Me?â
Suspect #2: âJoggers! Itâs More Lifestyleâ
Suspect #3: âNo heâs talking about your clothing line She by Sheree are you bringing it back?â
Suspect #2: âI KnOw I AnSwErEd It đŤ â
Suspect #3: âOh, well it wasnât clearâ
Suspect #2: âYOU WERENâT CLEAR!, I said Iâm doing joggersâ
Suspect #3: âWhy am I getting so much backlashâ
Suspect #4: âShe came in a little lit, didnât she?â
Suspect #1: âSo youâre saying you doing a line by She by Sheree athletic wear?â
Suspect #2: âAthletic but Lifestyleâ
Suspect #1: âWhen?â đŤ
Suspect #2: âUhh probably more September, for uhh that is uhh Spring Summer, September spring the show is spring summer!â đđŤ đŤ¤
Suspect #5: *Reaction below* đ
#ThrowbackThursday #Rhoa #SheinBySheree đ
Iâm so tired of hearing, âOur generation worked hard and bought a house at 25.â
Yeah, Brenda, well they also paid $15,000 for that house and didnât have to sell a kidney for health insurance.
We are out here with degrees, two jobs, and six mental breakdowns a week just trying to afford the good toilet paper.
Back then, you could work at Sears, retire with a pension, and still have time for hobbies.
Now we are juggling side hustles, student loans, and therapy appointments.
Your generation could pay off college with a summer job.
Weâre out here with 30 year debt for a piece of paper that got us an entry-level job requiring âfive years of experience.â
You had job stability.
We have âyour position has been eliminatedâ emails that start with âwe value your contributions.â
You bought affordable houses.
We buy groceries and hope our card doesnât decline.
You had neighborhood barbecues.
We have group chats where everyoneâs too tired to hang out.
WellâŚâstop buying Starbucks!â
Be serious. That $6 latte isnât the reason rent is $2400.
That coffee is the ONLY moment of peace some of us get before another day of pretending everythingâs fine.
You had one job and one paycheck that covered a whole life.
We have two jobs, bills that are past due, and an ongoing mental, physical, emotional, and spiritual crisis.
You could actually save for the future.
We are just trying to survive the month.
Somehow, you have come to the conclusion that weâre the generation that âdoesnât want to work.â
NO. We just want it to mean something again.
Weâre not lazy.
Weâre burnt out, overworked, underpaid, and constantly being told the reason we canât afford a house is because we like occupational takeout and a fancy coffe..
YesâŚyour generation could buy a house on one salary.
Ours is just trying to survive the cost of being alive.
And in the end, we are just doing the very best that we can in an economy that keeps gaslighting us for trying.
Pew pew đŤ
Kyren Lacy: Dragged by the Internet, Cleared by the Evidence â His Father Speaks Out
When news first broke about a fatal crash in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, the internet was quick to crown a villain: former LSU wide receiver Kyren Lacy. Police accused him of reckless driving, charges were filed, and his mugshot spread like wildfire across social media. In the court of public opinion, he was guilty before he ever had a chance to defend himself.
But now, the truth is out and it tells a very different story.
⸝
The Crash That Sparked a Firestorm
Authorities alleged Lacy caused a chain reaction that killed 78-year-old Herman Hall. They accused him of reckless passing, issued a warrant for his arrest, and tied his name to negligent homicide.
Almost instantly, Twitter threads, comment sections, and blog posts branded him reckless and selfish. NFL dreams dimmed overnight as scouts reportedly backed away. His name was dragged through the mud before the facts were ever made clear.
⸝
The Evidence That Changed Everything
Months later, attorney Matthew Ory revealed game-changing evidence:
⢠Surveillance showed Lacyâs car was 72 yards behind the wreck at the moment of impact.
⢠He arrived almost four seconds after the crash proving he didnât cause it.
⢠Though he passed cars earlier, he had returned to his lane before the accident.
In short: Kyren Lacy was not the cause of the crash.
⸝
A Fatherâs Painful Words
While the internet is now reckoning with the truth, his family is left to grieve. His father, Kenny Lacy, posted a heartbreaking message online:
âA lot of people owe my baby a big apology. You can rest a lil easier now my guy. I miss you lots. #K2â
His words echo the pain of a family who watched their sonâs name destroyed while he was still alive and now want the world to acknowledge how wrong they were.
⸝
The Damage of Online Slander
Despite the evidence, the internetâs rush to judgment had already scarred his name and career. His attorney called it a âwitch hunt.â Critics now point out how fast society moves to cancel and condemn before facts emerge.
Tragically, Kyren Lacy never lived to see his name cleared. He died by suicide before a grand jury could hear the very evidence that absolved him.
⸝
The Lesson We Canât Ignore
Kyrenâs story is no longer just about football or one tragic accident. Itâs about how the internet can destroy lives in seconds. He was judged, canceled, and crucified online only for the truth to reveal he wasnât at fault.
His fatherâs words cut deep: many do, indeed, owe Kyren Lacy an apology.
⸝
đđ˝ Do you think the media and internet should be held accountable when false narratives ruin lives?
đ The night America failed Iryna Zarutska
She was only twenty three. She had already lived through war.
She left her home in Ukraine in 2022 when Russian bombs fell on her city.
She came to America because she believed it was safe.
She believed it was a place where she could work hard, study, and build a future.
She dreamed of becoming a veterinary assistant, caring for animals. M
She found a modest job at a pizzeria in Charlotte.
She lived quietly, worked honestly, and did nothing to harm anyone.
On the evening of August 22nd, Iryna finished her shift at the restaurant.
She put on her light jacket over her work uniform, carried her phone, and boarded Charlotteâs Lynx Blue Line. It was almost 9:50 p.m.
The train car was half full.
She slipped into a seat, put her headphones on, and started scrolling through her phone.
To her, it was just another night in her new life.
To her killer, it was something else entirely.
Standing nearby was Decarlos Brown Jr.
He was no stranger to law enforcement. His rap sheet stretched back over a decade.
Since 2011, he had been arrested at least fourteen times.
His record included armed robbery, larceny, trespassing, assault on a government official, drug charges, and multiple violations that showed escalating violence.
Just months earlier he had called 911 in a delusional state, claiming âman made materialâ was inside his body and controlling him.
He had been flagged repeatedly as unstable and dangerous, yet he kept slipping back onto the streets. Each release was another roll of the dice, another chance for disaster.
On this night, the dice came up deadly.
As the train rattled down the tracks, passengers were lost in their phones or staring out the windows. Nobody noticed Brown slip a folding knife from his pocket. Nobody noticed as he stepped closer to the young woman sitting in her seat, completely unaware of the danger behind her.
At 9:50 p.m., the nightmare unfolded in seconds. Brown lunged forward, slashing Iryna across the throat. He struck her two more times, stabbing her in the chest. Her body collapsed onto the floor of the train as blood spread around her. The other riders froze in horror. Nobody had time to react.
Brown showed no remorse.
He wiped his bloody hands on his hoodie. He calmly walked to the train doors. At the next stop he stepped off, leaving Iryna dying on the floor. Witnesses later described his casual exit as if he had just stepped off after an ordinary ride.
Six minutes later police arrived. By then it was too late. Iryna was pronounced dead on the train. The dreams she carried to America had been stolen in less than half a minute.
The man responsible is in custody. He has been charged with first degree murder. But that is not justice. Justice would have been keeping him behind bars long before he ever crossed paths with her.
And yet here is the most chilling part of all: the silence.
Where are the headlines? Where is the outrage?
The same media that saturated the airwaves with endless coverage of George Floyd and Daniel Penny has not written a word about Iryna Zarutska.
Not the New York Times. Not CNN. Not the Washington Post. Not NPR. Not USA Today. Not ABC. Not MSNBC. Not PBS.
They decided her life was not worth telling.
Why? Because she does not fit their story.
If Iryna had been Black and her killer White, the coverage would be endless. It would be on every television channel and splashed across every front page. Protestors would be marching in the streets. Politicians would be rushing to the microphones to offer speeches.
Instead, because she was White, her story does not serve the approved narrative. And so the media chooses to erase her.
That is not just bias.
That is deliberate.
It is coordinated.
It is evil.
Iryna came here believing America was different from the country she fled. She thought she had found safety. Instead she was butchered on a train by a repeat offender who should never have been free. And the institutions that claim to care about justice and equality have looked away.
Her death is not just the result of one manâs knife. It is the result of a system that values ideology over safety. It is the result of prosecutors who keep letting violent criminals out. It is the result of a media machine that decides which lives count and which lives can be erased.
Iryna Zarutska deserved better. She deserved safety. She deserved protection. She deserved to be remembered.
Do not let them bury her memory.
Say her name.
Tell her story.
Demand justice.
Remember Iryna Zarutska.
My mom signed my birth certificate. I signed her death certificate. My mom chose my first outfit. I chose her last outfit.. My mom watched me take my first breath. I watched her take her last breath. So please donât EVER try to tell me I shouldnât still be grieving my mother! đĽş
THATâS MY MOTHER !! #RestInPeace Momma
This is such a powerful image because grief truly hurts.
Itâs called âDonât Die with the Deadâ, and I get it. đ˘
While grief has no time limit, many spend their days mourning whatâs gone rather than embracing the life weâre still privileged to have.
Please, live.
The ones you've lost would want you to live life to the fullest. They understand better than anyone that weâre all here for only a limited time.
Grief never really ends, it just learns to live beside you.
Sending prayers to those who are still grieving.â¤ď¸âđŠš
10 AI tools you should try in 2025
1. ChatGPT.com â solves anything
2. RecCloud.com â converts speech to text
3. MidJourney.com â generates art
4. Replit.com â writes and runs code
5. Synthesia.ai â creates AI videos
6. Soundraw.io â produces music in seconds
7. Fliki.ai â turns text into TikToks
8. Starry.ai â creates AI avatars
9. SlidesAI.io â makes presentations for you
10. PicWish.com â edits photos fast
Save this.
Things That Surprised Me About NYC
You read a dozen lists about skyscrapers, Broadway, and Times Squareâbut here's the real deal: the things that actually surprised me in New York City werenât the big-ticket icons. They were the little sensory quirks and little moments that snuck up on me when I wasnât looking.
1. That Subway Door SLAM
You think your Metro-Northâs slam is loud until an NYC subway carâs doors close right next to you. Itâs the kind of metallic CRACK that makes you check your jaw for damage. Turns out, noise experts clock the subway peak at over 102 dBâthatâs louder than a rock concert.
2. Bagels That Seriously Hit Different
I thought all bagels were the sameâuntil NYC taught me otherwise. Hereâs the deal:
The cityâs water is famously soft, helping gluten develop into that perfect chew and crust
They hand-roll each bagel, shaping traditions passed down through generations
And yes, thereâs a boiling step before bakingâwith malt syrup in the water to give that shiny, caramel-brown exterior
making a proper bagel is like mastering a high-wire actâmess up one step, and the whole thing collapses.
Hereâs the thing, though: not all bagels in NYC are created equal. You could wander into an average deli and think, Eh, whatâs the hype? So it is important to do your research.
3. Staten Island Ferry: Free and Full of Surprises
Picture it: fresh breeze, harbor views, views of Lady Liberty at no cost. Plus, boats run 24/7 and it's about a 25-minute ride. And yestourists love it. But so do locals.. Itâs the worldâs busiest passenger-only ferry, spanning 5.2 miles between Staten Island and Manhattan.
4. That Uncanny Street-Level Soundtrack
New York hums. Seriously. Itâs not just trafficâitâs the rumble under your feet, bits of conversation spilling from open windows, someone practicing saxophone on a stoop. Yet somehow, when youâre walking,you forget youâre even in a metropolis.
Itâs like the city is audibly sneaking up on you.
5. The Street Plant Corners
This one surprised me just walking around Brooklyn.People literally create corners of leafy green with potted plants outside their doors, like mini botanical sanctuaries. One NewYorker shared:
âI grew up in the city⌠you just can't get a good bagel outside of NYC.â
That same comment could apply to these plant spotsâonly in NYC, folks still treasure that little slice of nature amid the concrete.
6. How a Bagel Is Also a Cultural Time Capsule
NYC bagels arenât just tasty,theyâre a story. They originated from Eastern European Jewish immigrants, became a community staple, and even had their own bakers' union because craftsmanship mattered that much.
Every bite carries history, tradition, and the voice of bakers across generations.
7. The Smell Map of NYC
Hereâs the thing nobody warns you about: New York has layers. One step, youâre in a cloud of roasted peanuts that makes you consider buying a bag. Two steps later, youâre regretting life because you just walked past an open trash bag in July. Then BAM: you hit the sweet, buttery wave coming from a bakery, and suddenly youâre in love with the city again. Itâs like scent-based Russian roulette.
8. The Ceilings That Deserve Their Own Instagram
Everyoneâs so busy looking straight ahead that they forget to look up. Grand Centralâs turquoise constellation mural looks like the prettiest screensaver youâve ever seen. The New York Public Libraryâs reading room ceiling could be in a palace. Even some subway stations have mosaic art that deserves more attention than they get.
9. Free Stuff Thatâs Actually Worth Your Time
In most cities, âfreeâ means âmeh.â Not the case in New York City. Shakespeare in the Park, live jazz in the subway that sounds like a ticketed concert, museum nights where you can pay what you wantâitâs like the city is showing off. The trick is knowing when and where, because these freebies fill up fast.
10. How Fast You Learn the âNew Yorker Walkâ
It takes about three days to level up. On day one, youâre politely sidestepping and apologizing to everyone. By day three, youâre zigzagging through crowds like a seasoned commuter and sighing loudly at tourists who stop mid-sidewalk to take a picture. Congratulations,youâve evolved.
12. The Magic of Pizza at 2 A.M.
Thereâs pizza, and then thereâs 2 a.m. pizza. Somehow the crust is crispier, the cheese stretchier, and the whole experience just more⌠transcendent. Maybe itâs the hunger, maybe itâs the cityâs energy, or maybe itâs just that New York pizza doesnât believe in bad timing. Whatever it is, it hits different.